03 Apr Chinese EV maker Aion plans Indonesia plant, vying against rivals like BYD for slice of promising Southeast Asia market
Guangzhou-based Aion will partner with Indomobil Group, a carmaker based in Jakarta, to localise its production and supply chain, offering Indonesian consumers a variety of intelligent new-energy vehicles, it said in a statement on Tuesday.
“The tie-up with Indomobil means our dual assembly plan for the Southeast Asian market is finalised,” Aion said in the statement. “We will bring more options for the local EV market.”
A clutch of Chinese EV assemblers have flocked to Southeast Asia to either build their own plants or sell their Chinese-made vehicles amid increasing demand for battery-powered cars.
Major players have been accelerating their go-global drive since last year, with Southeast Asia emerging as a key overseas markets due to harsh stances on Chinese-made electric cars taken by authorities in the United States and Europe.
The European Commission launched an anti-subsidy investigation last September, and is seen as likely to impose tariffs higher than the standard rate of 10 per cent on Chinese-made electric cars.
The Biden administration is considering curbing imports of Chinese EVs, which Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo described as a risk to US citizens because they collect a “huge amount of information about a driver”.
In Southeast Asia, car sales contracted by 2.1 per cent in 2023 to 3.36 million, from 3.43 million in 2022.
Aion’s sales of EVs to Chinese buyers increased 77 per cent last year to 480,003, compared with 2022. It also announced that it plans to start sales of Aion cars in Indonesia in June when two sport-utility vehicles, the Aion Y Plus and Hyper HT, are displayed at the Gaikindo Indonesia International Auto Show.